Volkswagen’s CEO Could Get Paid a Lot Less Under a New Plan

Volkswagen is planning to cap the pay package of its chief executive at 10 million euros ($10.7 million) and keep pay for management board members below that, a source familiar with the matter said.

Under the plans, executives would receive a higher fixed salary and lower variable pay, and bonuses would be tied to dividends and the Volkswagen (VLKAY) stock price, business daily Handelsblatt reported earlier on Monday. Matthias Mueller is the CEO of Volkswagen.

Executives would also invest in company shares, which would then be held for several years, the paper added.

VW’s supervisory board has been working on new executive pay rules for some time. The 20-member panel is due to discuss the plans at its next meeting on Feb. 24, the source said.

A spokesman at VW’s Wolfsburg-based headquarters declined to comment, as did the carmaker’s works council whose members occupy about half the supervisory board’s seats.

The company has come under fire over executive pay before. Former CEO Martin Winterkorn used to be the best paid CEO among German blue-chip firms, receiving just under 16 million euros in 2014. In 2015 that was halved, but he still received 7.3 million euros in fixed and variable compensation, despite the company’s stock plunging on the back of an emissions scandal.

Last month, the carmaker’s compliance chief left after just over one year in the job following a falling out, reportedly receiving around 12 million euros.